6.7 KiB
id | title |
---|---|
configuring_unleash | Configuring Unleash |
In order to customize "anything" in Unleash you need to use Unleash from Node.js:
const unleash = require('unleash-server');
const unleashOptions = {
db: {
user: 'unleash_user',
password: 'passord',
host: 'localhost',
port: 5432,
database: 'unleash',
ssl: false,
},
enableRequestLogger: true,
};
unleash.start(unleashOptions);
Available Unleash options include:
- db - The database configuration object taking the following properties:
- user - the database username (
DATABASE_USERNAME
) - password - the database password (
DATABASE_PASSWORD
) - host - the database hostname (
DATABASE_HOST
) - port - the database port defaults to 5432 (
DATABASE_PORT
) - database - the database name to be used (
DATABASE_NAME
) - ssl - an object describing ssl options, see https://node-postgres.com/features/ssl (
DATABASE_SSL
, as a stringified json object) - version - the postgres database version. Used to connect a non-standard database. Defaults to
undefined
, which let the underlying adapter to detect the version automatically. (DATABASE_VERSION
)
- user - the database username (
- databaseUrl - (deprecated) the postgres database url to connect to. Only used if db object is not specified. Should include username/password. This value may also be set via the
DATABASE_URL
environment variable. Alternatively, if you would like to read the database url from a file, you may set theDATABASE_URL_FILE
environment variable with the full file path. The contents of the file must be the database url exactly. - databaseSchema - the postgres database schema to use. Defaults to 'public'. (
DATABASE_SCHEMA
) - port - which port the unleash-server should bind to. If port is omitted or is 0, the operating system will assign an arbitrary unused port. Will be ignored if pipe is specified. This value may also be set via the
HTTP_PORT
environment variable - host - which host the unleash-server should bind to. If host is omitted, the server will accept connections on the unspecified IPv6 address (::) when IPv6 is available, or the unspecified IPv4 address (0.0.0.0) otherwise. This value may also be set via the
HTTP_HOST
environment variable - pipe - parameter to identify IPC endpoints. See https://nodejs.org/api/net.html#net_identifying_paths_for_ipc_connections for more details
- enableLegacyRoutes (boolean) - allows you to turn on/off support for legacy routes to support older clients. Disabled by default. Will be removed in 4.x.
- serverMetrics (boolean) - use this option to turn on/off prometheus metrics.
- preHook (function) - this is a hook if you need to provide any middlewares to express before
unleash
adds any. Express app instance is injected as first argument. - preRouterHook (function) - use this to register custom express middlewares before the
unleash
specific routers are added. This is typically how you would register custom middlewares to handle authentication. - adminAuthentication (string) - use this when implementing custom admin authentication securing-unleash. Possible values are:
none
- will disable authentication altogetherunsecure
- (default) will use simple cookie based authentication. UI will require the user to specify an email in order to use unleash.custom
- use this when you implement your own custom authentication logic.
- ui (object) - Set of UI specific overrides. You may set the following keys:
headerBackground
,environment
,slogan
. - getLogger (function) - Used to register a custom log provider.
- eventHook (
function(event, data)
) - If provided, this function will be invoked whenever a feature is mutated. The possible values forevent
are'feature-created'
,'feature-updated'
,'feature-archived'
,'feature-revived'
. Thedata
argument contains information about the mutation. Its fields aretype
(string) - the event type (same asevent
);createdBy
(string) - the user who performed the mutation;data
- the contents of the change. The contents indata
differs based on the event type; For'feature-archived'
and'feature-revived'
, the only field will bename
- the name of the feature. For'feature-created'
and'feature-updated'
the data follows a schema defined in the code here. See an example here. - baseUriPath (string) - use to register a base path for all routes on the application. For example
/my/unleash/base
(note the starting /). Defaults to/
. Can also be configured through the environment variableBASE_URI_PATH
. - unleashUrl (string) - Used to specify the official URL this instance of Unleash can be accessed at for an end user. Can also be configured through the environment variable
UNLEASH_URL
. - secureHeaders (boolean) - use this to enable security headers (HSTS, CSP, etc) when serving Unleash from HTTPS. Can also be configured through the environment variable
SECURE_HEADERS
.
Disabling Auto-Start
If you're using Unleash as part of a larger express app, you can disable the automatic server start by calling server.create
. It takes the same options as server.start
, but will not begin listening for connections.
const unleash = require('unleash-server');
// ... const app = express();
unleash
.create({
databaseUrl: 'postgres://unleash_user:password@localhost:5432/unleash',
port: 4242,
})
.then(result => {
app.use(result.app);
console.log(`Unleash app generated and attached to parent application`);
});
Securing Unleash
You can integrate Unleash with your authentication provider (OAuth 2.0). Read more about securing unleash.
How do I configure the log output?
By default, unleash
uses log4js to log important information. It is possible to swap out the logger provider (only when using Unleash programmatically). You do this by providing an implementation of the getLogger function as This enables filtering of log levels and easy redirection of output streams.
function getLogger(name) {
// do something with the name
return {
debug: console.log,
info: console.log,
warn: console.log,
error: console.error,
};
}
The logger interface with its debug
, info
, warn
and error
methods expects format string support as seen in debug
or the JavaScript console
object. Many commonly used logging implementations cover this API, e.g., bunyan, pino or winston.